With three weeks remaining in college basketball’s regular season, Cal has a resume unlike any in the country.

The Bears are 16-0 at home, 1-8 away from home.

Asked if he’s aware of another team with such a massive disparity between its home and road records, Cal coach Cuonzo Martin said, “Not to my knowledge. … I’m quite sure there have been many teams like that.”

Actually, maybe not.

Dating back to the 2000-01 season, there hasn’t been a single team from one of the nation’s top six conferences — the ACC, Big East, Big 12, Big Ten, Pac-12 or SEC — to go unbeaten at home and perform so helplessly on the road.

There are 26 Division I teams still boasting perfect home records this season, and 19 of them are projected by ESPN bracketologist Joe Lunardi to land NCAA tournament bids. That includes Cal, which gets strong computer rankings by the RPI (23) and Ken Pomeroy (32).

But none of those 26 has such a conflicted resume. The other 25 with spotless home records also have an average of more than seven road/neutral victories. Fifteen of them have at least .500 records away from home.

Cal’s only check mark in that column was an overtime victory at Wyoming on Dec. 5. By selection Sunday, that win will be wearing three months of dust.

NCAA selection committee chair Joe Castiglione, the athletic director at Oklahoma, said Monday that the Bears’ tournament prospects won’t be single-handedly torpedoed by their road woes.

“A team’s performance on the road is certainly among the criteria we consider, but it’s just one of several different important points,” he said, alluding to Cal’s 4-4 record vs. the RPI top 25. “We also consider the makeup of the team. For instance, with Cal, we recognize the youth. But also the opportunity they still have available to improve their road performance.”

The Bears get four more chances on the road before the Pac-12 tournament, starting with games Thursday at Washington and Sunday at Washington State. They close the regular season the first weekend of March with two games in Arizona.

Cal’s home success has been fueled by an encouraging environment at Haas Pavilion, where the Bears’ average home attendance of 9,974 is third-best in the Pac-12.

“It has a lot to do with your fans,” Martin said. “On the flip side, going away from home there has to be growth from our team to understand we can’t take our fans with us.”

Junior guard Jabari Bird, who was named Pac-12 player of the week after averaging 23.5 points in wins over Oregon and Oregon State, said the Bears must generate their own momentum this week.

“We haven’t had a lot of energy on the road, especially in conference,” he said. “We have to learn how to play above the crowd and play to silence the crowd.”

Only Stanford, coached by Mike Montgomery, tops that among Bay Area men’s programs. The Cardinal won at least 20 games 10 straight seasons through 2004.

Tara VanDerveer’s Stanford women had a string of 11 consecutive 20-win seasons through 1998 and are working on an active run of 15 straight, including this season.